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CuisineModern British
Executive ChefPaul Croasdale
LocationEssex, United Kingdom
Opinionated About Dining

A former village pub in Great Dunmow, Essex, Flitch of Bacon represents the more considered end of the rural gastropub revival. Under chef Paul Croasdale, the kitchen operates within a Modern British frame and holds an Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe recommendation (2023), placing it well above the county's average pub kitchen in critical standing. Open Wednesday through Sunday, it draws from both local and London-adjacent crowds.

Flitch of Bacon restaurant in Essex, United Kingdom
About

Where Essex Pub Dining Punches Above Its Weight

The car park off Tanton Road in Great Dunmow gives little away. A village setting, a pub sign, the usual rural Essex quietude. But the gastropub wave that reshaped British eating over the past two decades did not stop at the M25, and Flitch of Bacon is one of the cleaner examples of what serious kitchen ambition looks like when it plants itself in a market town rather than a metropolitan postcode. The building reads as a traditional English pub; the cooking does not.

This matters because the gastropub story in England is fundamentally a story about geography. The format was always about returning culinary seriousness to places that had drifted into frozen-lasagne complacency, and the leading versions of it — Hand and Flowers in Marlow is the standard reference, holding two Michelin stars from a pub building in Buckinghamshire — proved that the room does not determine the ceiling. What happens in the kitchen does.

The Gastropub Frame, and How Flitch Sits Inside It

Modern British cooking at the pub level occupies a different competitive tier than the formal dining rooms associated with the cuisine at its most decorated. The tasting-menu format favoured by rooms like CORE by Clare Smyth in London or L'Enclume in Cartmel sits at one end of the spectrum; the gastropub sits at the other, prioritising accessibility over ceremony. What the better pub kitchens have in common with their fine-dining counterparts is a commitment to sourcing, seasonality, and technique , the difference is in how those things are packaged and priced.

Flitch of Bacon operates squarely within that gastropub tradition while attracting the kind of critical attention that puts it in a peer set above most Essex pub kitchens. Its 2023 Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe recommendation is a meaningful signal in that context: OAD's casual list draws on aggregated critic and enthusiast opinions rather than institutional inspection, and inclusion reflects genuine quality observed repeatedly rather than a single favourable review cycle. For a county-level pub, that places Flitch in company that most Essex dining rooms never reach.

Chef Paul Croasdale runs the kitchen. His role is worth noting as evidence of the venue's positioning rather than as biography: the gastropub revival depends on chefs of serious professional formation choosing the pub format deliberately, and the OAD recognition suggests Croasdale's cooking meets the standard of that choice.

Great Dunmow and the Essex Dining Context

Essex has a complicated culinary reputation. The county sits close enough to London to attract commuter money but far enough from the capital to have developed its own dining culture slowly and unevenly. The coastal stretch generates interest through seafood , J.T. Farnham's and Woodman's of Essex anchor the fried clam tradition on the northeast coast , but inland Essex has fewer critical reference points. Great Dunmow, a market town in the Uttlesford district, is not a destination that generates much food press on its own terms. Flitch changes that calculus slightly.

The practical geography works in its favour for a specific type of visitor: those driving out from London on a Thursday or Friday, or making a weekend stop between the capital and Suffolk or Norfolk. The A120 corridor is not a dining destination in any conventional sense, but it places Great Dunmow within reach of London without requiring a full country-house weekend commitment. For those exploring the county more broadly, our full Essex restaurants guide maps the wider field, alongside hotels, bars, experiences, and wineries across the county.

The Wider Modern British Context

Modern British as a cuisine category spans an enormous range. At one pole sit the multi-starred dining rooms: The Fat Duck in Bray, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton, and in Cambridge, Midsummer House. At the other sit the Sunday-roast pubs that use the cuisine label loosely. The gastropub tier sits between these extremes, and the stronger examples , hide and fox in Saltwood, 33 The Homend in Ledbury, and The Ritz Restaurant in London occupying a very different formal register , demonstrate that Modern British is most coherent when the kitchen has a clear position on sourcing and technique rather than a broad claim to national identity.

Flitch of Bacon's OAD standing suggests the kitchen occupies the upper portion of the gastropub tier, where critical seriousness and pub accessibility coexist without obvious compromise.

Planning a Visit

The kitchen is closed Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday through Saturday service runs from noon to 9:30 pm, which gives it a longer operational window than many comparable gastropubs and accommodates both lunch and dinner sittings without forcing a choice. Sunday closes earlier at 5:00 pm, making it better suited to a midday or early afternoon visit. The address , off Tanton Road, with car parking , makes it a driving destination rather than one accessible on foot from a train station, so arrival by car is the practical assumption. A Google rating of 4.8 from 150 reviews is a consistent signal of guest satisfaction across a meaningful sample for a room of this type and location. Booking ahead is advisable, particularly for weekend lunch, given the limited local competition at this quality level.

Frequently Asked Questions

Would Flitch of Bacon be comfortable with kids?

Flitch of Bacon is a pub-format restaurant, so children are generally accommodated without the formality of a tasting-menu room , though this is rural Essex gastropub territory, not a soft-play dining venue, and parents should set expectations accordingly.

What should I expect atmosphere-wise at Flitch of Bacon?

The setting is a traditional Essex village pub in Great Dunmow, and the atmosphere follows that register: relaxed, unhurried, without the ceremony of a formal dining room. What the OAD Casual in Europe recommendation (2023) signals is that the cooking operates at a level above the surroundings, which is precisely the dynamic that defines the gastropub format at its most successful. Pricing sits within the casual rather than fine-dining tier, making the critical standing relative to cost one of the stronger value arguments in the county.

What's the signature dish at Flitch of Bacon?

No specific signature dishes are documented in the public record for Flitch of Bacon, and inventing menu details would misrepresent the kitchen's current output. What the OAD Casual in Europe recognition (2023) and chef Paul Croasdale's direction indicate is a Modern British menu built around the seasonal and sourcing principles that define the serious end of the gastropub tradition , the specific dishes are leading discovered on the day rather than anticipated from a list.

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